Trulyobjective1

12.2K posts

Trulyobjective1

Trulyobjective1

@trulyobjective

Taking an honest common sense approach to fixing America

United States of America Katılım Şubat 2024
21 Takip Edilen158 Takipçiler
Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
@FluentInFinance Not receiving a can of soda or a low quality snack that most people complain about anyways is not a loss for the consumer.
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Andrew Lokenauth | TheFinanceNewsletter.com
BREAKING: Delta Air Lines will no longer offer free snacks or drinks on all flights starting May 19th (under 350 miles). Meanwhile, Delta CEO Ed Bastian received $27.1 million in 2024. Consumers lose, every single time.
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daz
daz@MetamateDaz·
Many people believe that poor people shouldn't buy certain things with benefits/welfare; I believe billionaires and politicians shouldn't buy 14-year-old girls. That's just my opinion.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
Both alcohol and tobacco are poisons. We can certainly discuss whether weed is more or less dangerous than those however if the basis of your argument is comparing it to other dangerous substances, your admitting yours should be banned too. Alcohol and tobacco are incredibly dangerous and have impacted or destroyed millions of lives over the years. Society needs fewer dangerous and destructive poisons, not more.
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Peppermint 🧇🎈 / 🎱🎀
@trulyobjective @V_arrell Many vices do the same. Alcohol, tobacco, etc. Weed impacts your body less so than alcohol. Yet tobacco and alcohol are legal, while weed isn't. I'm not saying it's a wonder drug with no downsides, but it's constantly over-demonized in media.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
@_GirlSay Another liberal complaining about something that never happened.
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𝕽𝖍𝖒𝖟
𝕽𝖍𝖒𝖟@TRimamfyen·
i smoke my fair share of weed and never once did i hit the joint and say “wow crack would be way better than this stuff”.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
We have locked in low property taxes for life, built up 6 figure equity, are actively making the home our dream property and will be able to retire paying a fraction of what rent would be for a small apartment in our spacious home. Buying a home was one of the best financial and life decisions we've made.
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Mistress Dividend
Mistress Dividend@mistressdivy·
Anyone regret buying a house and just go back to renting?
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
@misssomething__ Where was your concern when the cost of housing (by far the largest expense) rose over 50% during the Biden/Harris administration?
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
@WillyBobWard @PLegalization Tobacco, nicotine, alcohol and marijuana are all poisons. This is well known and common sense. Any argument against this fact is nothing more than trying to justify a vice you want to not be a poison.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
@skumWgmi Where in the world do you live? We spend half that on a family of 3 eating fresh produce, meats, dairy and a very diverse assortment of healthy ingredients.
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skum
skum@skumWgmi·
I spent $340 on groceries last week. Chicken, Rice, Eggs, Vegetables. Nothing interesting nothing indulgent. $340. I didn't even buy cereal because I did the math and put it back.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
@jeremyct They are the same generation that complains about working to hard and who embraced "quiet quitting". Previous generations did what they needed to in order to get ahead not complain.
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Jeremy
Jeremy@jeremyct·
older generations love to say “we all struggled in our 20s.” not like this. you weren’t paying $3,500 in rent and $28 for eggs. you didn’t graduate with $50k in debt and zero job security. gen z isn’t being dramatic. they’re drowning.
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daz
daz@MetamateDaz·
I paid $800 a month for a 1 bedroom apartment in 2021, I now pay $2,400 in 2026. HOW??? It’s only been 5 years.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
The same people who complained about working too hard are complaining about not being able to afford life. Several years ago, everyone was "quiet quitting". During this time we dug deep and worked harder while others were talking about too much being demanded of them. Fast forward to today, we are making more than twice as much as we were then and have the freedom and finances to do as we which while those who didn't want to work as hard are complaining about affordability. Hard work is the way forward.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
In states were property tax increases are frozen or limited, property tax is the most advantageous way to pay for public services. The alternative would be an uncapped consumption tax which would result in most people spending more on an annual basis to fund the public services which are necessary.
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Trulyobjective1
Trulyobjective1@trulyobjective·
It is the homeowner's responsibility to review and adjust their coverage for a home. You can not pay the premium for coverage equal to what a home previously cost and expect a larger payout. The coverage amounts are clearly outlined in every policy. If you need more coverage, you need to pay for it.
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MatrixMysteries
MatrixMysteries@MatrixMysteries·
A woman loses her home in a fire. She asks insurance to rebuild the SAME home—no upgrades, no expansion. Insurance says NO. Her policy only covers what the house USED to cost. After years of paying premiums, she finds out the “coverage” disappears when she actually needs it.
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